92% of Muslims in UK feel ‘much less safe’ after nationwide rioting: Poll

92% of Muslims in UK feel ‘much less safe’ after nationwide rioting: Poll
People hold anti-racist placards as they take part in a "Stop the Far-right" demonstration on a National Day of Protest, outside of the headquarters of the Reform UK political party, in London. (File/AFP)
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Updated 17 August 2024
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92% of Muslims in UK feel ‘much less safe’ after nationwide rioting: Poll

92% of Muslims in UK feel ‘much less safe’ after nationwide rioting: Poll
  • British charity releases data highlighting spike in Islamophobia during, after violence
  • Rise in hate incidents pushing ‘really talented’ people to emigrate: King’s adviser

LONDON: Rioting in the UK has left 92 percent of Muslims feeling “much less safe,” a new poll has found.

Commissioned by Muslim Census and conducted on Aug. 5-6, the poll found that one in six people suffered racist attacks since the beginning of the riots, The Independent reported.

The week-long rioting by far-right groups, mainly in England, began on July 30 and ended with a massive campaign of arrests.

The poll came as an adviser to King Charles on race relations warned that Britain is facing a brain drain of middle-class Muslims amid rising Islamophobia.

Harris Bokhari said growing numbers of Muslims nationwide feel that Britain is no longer a welcoming place for people from different cultures.

Despite “loving this country beyond anything,” he told The Times that he has discussed emigrating with his family.

“The way I view it now is that we have a brain drain,” he said. “So, from the Muslim community we have got really talented people who have left the country and more people (are thinking about) leaving the country.”

The poll, which surveyed 1,519 people from different backgrounds, found that Muslims, in reporting racist incidents since the rioting, most frequently faced verbal attacks (28 percent).

It was followed by 16 percent reporting online abuse. A further 4 percent said they had suffered physical attacks.

The co-founder of Muslim Census, Sadiq Dorasat, said: “We have heard stories about hijabis that don’t feel safe to leave their homes or go to work. We’ve seen a witch hunt directed to people of the Muslim faith mentioning Allah and His Messenger and people are concerned for their safety.”

The violence that broke out in late July saw mosques, Muslim-owned business and asylum hotels targeted in cities across the UK.

Dorasat said: “This has been a growing and rising problem. We see it day to day and some people might not even be surprised at the riots that are taking place.

“Since the start of the year, Muslims have been experiencing these Islamophobic incidents and it has only been accelerated in the last week. Nobody should be surprised.”

Following the campaign of mass arrests to bring an end to the rioting, Prime Minister Keir Starmer pledged to combat hate and launch new protective measures for mosques nationwide. But Dorasat called on him to “properly call out and punish the perpetrators.”

Tell Mama, a British charity that monitors anti-Muslim hate incidents, released new data that also highlight the spike in Islamophobia during and after the rioting.

The charity said it had received 500 reports of online and offline hate during the period, including death threats toward Muslim women.

Iman Atta, Tell Mama’s director, told The Times that the growth of Islamophobia means that emigration is no longer a “fringe thought” for many British Muslims.

“This means that some of our best doctors, nurses, accountants and healthcare workers have left and will continue to leave as they feel increasingly unsafe,” she said.

One of the charity’s co-founders, Fiyaz Mughal, told The Times that he is leaving Britain for Europe.

He said: “I’ve always stood by Britain and stood by the values; in fact I’ve challenged Islamist extremism and stood for British Muslim communities, but after this recent round I just thought when the hell are we going to get over this racism? And my mindset is I’ve had enough — I want to go to Europe.”

Bokhari, who has worked with every prime minister since Tony Blair on race relations, described his alarm at the number of young people involved in the nationwide riots. At least 50 people aged under 18 have been charged in connection with the violence.

He said: “There are some viral videos now … of parents taking along young kids shouting, ‘P***, go home.’

“But I’m not going to blame a young person for that. Young people are not born to be racist or homophobic or prejudiced.”

Bokhari called for the creation of a national service program to allow young people from different backgrounds to interact, in a bid to “break down barriers.”

He said: “If we can create a generation of young people that can fundamentally disagree with each other, but get them to work together and not hate each other, not victimise each other, not despise each other, do something positive together, then that’s what I think interfaith has to move towards.”


Islamic center head leaves Germany after deportation order

Updated 16 sec ago
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Islamic center head leaves Germany after deportation order

Islamic center head leaves Germany after deportation order
Mohammad Hadi Mofatteh, who was the head of the Hamburg Islamic Center before it was banned in July, left Germany on Tuesday evening
Investigators swooped on the Hamburg Islamic Center in July after concluding it was an “Islamist extremist organization” with links to Iran and Hezbollah

HAMBURG: The former head of an Islamic center in Germany banned for its alleged links to extremist groups has left the country after being served with a deportation order, local authorities said Wednesday.
Mohammad Hadi Mofatteh, who was the head of the Hamburg Islamic Center before it was banned in July, left Germany on Tuesday evening, the Hamburg interior ministry said in a statement.
Mofatteh, 57, had been ordered two weeks ago to leave Germany by Wednesday or face being deported at his own expense.
He will not be allowed to re-enter Germany for 20 years and could face up to three years in prison if he does, the ministry said.
Andy Grote, interior minister for the state of Hamburg, described Mofatteh as “one of Germany’s most prominent Islamists.”
“We will continue to take a tough line against Islamists with all legal means at our disposal,” he said in a statement.
Investigators swooped on the Hamburg Islamic Center in July after concluding it was an “Islamist extremist organization” with links to Iran and Lebanon’s Hezbollah group.
Iran reacted angrily to the accusations and shut down a German language institute in Tehran in what appeared to be a tit-for-tat move.
Mofatteh’s exit comes with the threat from Islamist extremists high on the political agenda in Germany after a deadly knife attack in the western city of Solingen in late August.
Three people were killed and eight injured in the rampage, allegedly carried out by a Syrian asylum seeker and claimed by the Daesh group.
The attack has reignited a bitter debate about immigration in Germany, with Interior Minister Nancy Faeser this week announcing new border controls to curb irregular migrant inflows.
The government has also promised to speed up deportations and a week after the Solingen attack deported Afghans convicted of crimes back to their home country for the first time since Taliban authorities took power in 2021.

Tajikistan’s chief mufti injured in attack, interior ministry says

Tajikistan’s chief mufti injured in attack, interior ministry says
Updated 38 min 34 sec ago
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Tajikistan’s chief mufti injured in attack, interior ministry says

Tajikistan’s chief mufti injured in attack, interior ministry says
  • The ministry said a person with “hooligan motives” had stabbed Abduqodirzoda following a prayer service at a mosque

DUSHANBE: Tajikistan’s top Muslim cleric Sayeedmukarram Abduqodirzoda was injured in an attack outside a central mosque in the capital Dushanbe on Wednesday, the interior ministry said.
The ministry said a person with “hooligan motives” had stabbed Abduqodirzoda following a prayer service at a mosque.
He suffered minor injuries and was released after a medical examination, the ministry said. Authorities detained the attacker and have opened a criminal case into the incident, it added.


Abduqodirzoda, 61, has served as chairman of the country’s highest Islamic institution, the Islamic Council of Ulema, since 2010, according to his official biography.
Tajikistan is a land-locked country of some 10 million people sandwiched between Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and China. The majority of Tajiks are adherents of the Hanafi school of Sunni Islam.


Zelensky says Ukraine’s victory ‘depends’ on United States

Zelensky says Ukraine’s victory ‘depends’ on United States
Updated 11 September 2024
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Zelensky says Ukraine’s victory ‘depends’ on United States

Zelensky says Ukraine’s victory ‘depends’ on United States
  • “As for the plan for victory... it depends mostly on the support of the United States. And other partners,” Zelensky said
  • Zelensky has said he will outline a plan to end the war by November

KYIV: President Volodymyr Zelensky said Wednesday that Ukraine’s plan to defeat Russia depended on Washington’s support, speaking as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Kyiv.
“As for the plan for victory... it depends mostly on the support of the United States. And other partners,” Zelensky said in a press conference.
His remarks come just under two months before US elections that could be challenging for Ukraine if Donald Trump is back in the White House.
Trump aides have suggested that if he wins, he would leverage aid to force Kyiv into territorial concessions to Russia to end the war.
Zelensky has said he will outline a plan to end the war by November.
He has argued that a surprise incursion by Ukrainian troops into Russia’s Kursk region allows Kyiv to enter potential negotiations from a position of strength.
Ukraine held a peace summit in June in Switzerland with leaders and top officials from more than 90 countries but did not invite Russia.
Zelensky has since said Moscow should be included in the next gathering.
The Kremlin has ruled out talks since the assault in Kursk, and has demanded Ukraine cede swathes of territory for a ceasefire.


Philippines deadliest place for environmental defenders in Asia, rights group says

Philippines deadliest place for environmental defenders in Asia, rights group says
Updated 11 September 2024
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Philippines deadliest place for environmental defenders in Asia, rights group says

Philippines deadliest place for environmental defenders in Asia, rights group says
  • Global Witness recorded 17 killings of environmentalists in Philippines in 2023
  • Colombia was the deadliest country for environmental activists, with 79 killed

MANILA: The Philippines is the deadliest country in Asia for environment defenders, the latest Global Witness report shows, with the country recording the most environmental killings in the region for over a decade.

At least 196 environmentalists and land activists were killed globally in 2023, according to UK advocacy group’s estimates released earlier this week.

The figure brings the total number of people killed for trying to protect their homes, community or the planet to 2,106 since 2012, when Global Witness started its monitoring.

Colombia was the deadliest country for environmentalists and land rights defenders in 2023, the Philippines was fourth.

“Colombia had record-high defender killings in 2023 with 79 deaths: the highest annual total ever recorded by Global Witness Followed by Brazil (25), Mexico (18) and Honduras (18) and the Philippines (17),” the report read.

At the same time, the Philippines was the third — preceded only by Colombia and Brazil — in the total number of such killings since the first Global Witness report, with 298 environmental and land activists killed between 2012 and 2023.

The report also highlighted “cases of enforced disappearances and abductions, pointed tactics used in both the Philippines and Mexico in particular, as well as the wider use of criminalisation as a tactic to silence activists across the world.”

Besides the Philippines, only two other Asian countries are featured in this year’s report: India, where five activists were killed, and Indonesia, where three such killings were recorded.

Jashaf Shamir Lorenzo, environmentalists and head of research at BAN Toxics Philippines, told Arab News that environmentalists were oppressed in a number of ways.

“The most extreme cases include red-tagging, abduction, and even killings ... It seems that environmentalists who are most at risk are those who get in the way of big industries, big politicians. It doesn’t really differ much from what we see happening to journalists, human rights defenders, and activists,” he said.

“We need the government to really take action — environmental concerns have always been a big part of political platforms for decades, but major incidences of abuse point towards a lack of commitment to not only protect the environment, but to protect its stewards.”

He said impunity of the abusers has been aided by government inaction since the times of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s predecessor, Rodrigo Duterte, who was in office from 2016 to 2022.

“Ever since Duterte, the government has been really lenient with these things,” he said.

“Unless the government really commits to protecting the environment, these abuses will only worsen.”


UK summons Iranian charge d’affaires over transfer of ballistic missiles to Russia

An Iranian Shahab-3 missile rises into the air after being test-fired at an undisclosed location in the Iranian desert. (AFP)
An Iranian Shahab-3 missile rises into the air after being test-fired at an undisclosed location in the Iranian desert. (AFP)
Updated 11 September 2024
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UK summons Iranian charge d’affaires over transfer of ballistic missiles to Russia

An Iranian Shahab-3 missile rises into the air after being test-fired at an undisclosed location in the Iranian desert. (AFP)
  • “UK Government was clear in that any transfer of Ballistic Missiles to Russia would be seen as a dangerous escalation and would face a significant response”: Ministry

LONDON: Britain’s foreign ministry on Wednesday summoned Iran’s charge d’affaires, the country’s most senior diplomat in London, over the transfer of ballistic missiles to Russia.
“Today, in coordination with European partners and upon instruction from the Foreign Secretary, the Chargé d’Affaires of the Iranian Embassy in London was summoned to the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.
“The UK Government was clear in that any transfer of Ballistic Missiles to Russia would be seen as a dangerous escalation and would face a significant response.”
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Tuesday during a visit to London that Russia had received ballistic missiles from Iran and would likely use them in its war in Ukraine within weeks.
On Tuesday, Britain, the US and European allies all condemned the move.
Britain sanctioned Iranian individuals and entities involved in drone and missile production, as well as Russian cargo ships it said were involved in transporting the missiles from Iran to Russia.